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PAGE Two. BOOMERANG Ii SENATE PROBE STRIKES DEMOS Republican Party Not Only One Injured, Is Pepper’s Charge. PORTLAND, Maine, April 3.— Senate Democrats, in endeavoring to inflict injury upon the Repubil- can party, have succeeded in dis- crediting both the ~ great polltical Senator Pepper, Republl- can, vania, declared in a “keynote” address here before the Republican state convention. This discrediting process has reached the point, Senator Pepper asserted, that “an irresponsible and highly dangerous third party” has actually suggested itself to the ex- tremists as a practical possibilit, The Democrats, he added, aimed “at us Americ “I am here today,” the senator stated, “to affirm my belief that the Democratic party has recently for- felted whatever claim to public con- fidence it may have possessed. I am her to reg r my conviction that upon us, who call ourselves the fol lowers Lincoln, r 3 the weight responsibility of hening and safeguarding the Republic. “Republicans of Maine, this is the task to which I. summon you—a task which should stimulate the en- thusiasm of every man and woman who holds the Republican tradition and is-ready to go forward to vic- tory under the leadership of Calvin re » choice of 15 delegates to the Republican national convention fa- able to President Coolidge but ged, appeared probable today. Although there was a possibility of a contest for one of the seven places vo! as delegates at large presidential preferences were not involved, all th candidates being in favor of Mr. Coplidge’s nomination. It has been the custom of both political parties in Maine to send un ucted dele- gates to the national convention, BUILDING PERMIT FOR ST, MARKS 15 ISSUED A permit was taken out yesterday @fternoon for the first part of the Episcopal church to be erected at Seventh and Wolcott streets. ‘The permit calls for a structure costing $102,000. It will be 57 feet by 118 feet. J. A. Johnson ts the contrac- tor. Work is now under way. Con- tracts for heating and plumbing wil bring the cost up to $115,000. $75,000 OF STOLEN FUNDS IS RECOVERED SA DIF navy officials her that Mrs, D. wife of the paymaster, yesterday re- turned $75,000 of the missing funds, Daisy Brown, Mrs. Nora laud Dies at Home In North Burlington Nora Laird, 28 years of age. at 2 on North E ton street yosterCay ever al will be made Saturday, held at 2 o’elde! from the v, Charles G NERVOUS, RUN- DOWN MOTHERS Worn Out Caring for Children and Housework—See how Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helps Shaf Btout Tndianapolis, Indiana.—-‘‘T wasina very nervous and run-down condition while nursing my baby, and hearing some talk of Lydia Pinkham’s Ve; etable Compoun: I began taking i From the sécond bottle I noticed a big improvement, and I am still tak- ing it. Lam nota Mi bit nervous now, and feel like a dif- | ferent person. It | at medicine for any onein a run-down condition and I The famous Taft smile wasn't only given William Howard, chief! Justice of the Supreme Court, His brother, Horace Taft (right), ehown a i with W. H. in the latter's study in Washington, has one too. Horace, rave Bee pee pais Taft is headmaster of the Taft School at Watertown, Conn, By AILEEN LAMONT NEW YORK, April 3. — The Scotch influence, which {s so ap- parent in the spring designs for dresses and hats in Paris, seems to have been stopped at the twelve mile limit, At least the plaids and tartan designs have not gained a foothold on Fifth avenue as yet. The designs of the great Parisian dressmakers in Scotch taffetas, em- ploying wide sashes and huge bows with hanging ends at the back, are undeniably attractive but they have not struck the American taste, Per- haps, however, when the French designers find the Scotch motif does not bring in the dollars, the Royal st sentiment in the Fauburgs may revive enough to provide the Amer. can taste with a bit of bourbon in. fluence. So far as Paris {s concerned the use of Scotch plaids is even more widespread on hats than for frocks. The milliners there seem to be of. fering the larger shapes in head gear to every customer but this has not affected the vogue of the cloche and the tight turban, The milliners, y find the cape ling effects coldly received always have a small hat on the other hand ready for presentation a th when they On even bows the small hats, large frequently seen. These. however, extend upward rather than outward and add ‘héighth = rathet than swidth to the effect and to thg Profle. The bows often are of double faced satin ribbon in two straw shape: INGOME TAXIS DISCUSSED KINANIS MEET are Kiwanis club t William B. Haselmire of th Regis try corporation, Delegates nomi- nated last week for the international convention of Kiwanis in Denver this June were elected unanimously. Th include William B, Cobb and y L. Black while alternates are Gee and Charles Cullen. Har M he secretary announced that a radio program of peculiar interest to Kiwanians would be broadcasted « the evening of April 9 at 9:30 o'clock Pacific time, from ac Calit., station KFBK, Judge Plummer will on “The Underprivileged The secretary was also instructed to write a letter of thanks to the Rotary club for the very ntertainment accorded the <iwanians Monday night Three one-act plays will be given Friday evening at the Natrona County High school auditorium, according to an announcement to. day by Eugene Loucks, student of the high school In his address on the history of me tax today Mr. Haselmire a the different laws that had } passed since the first in come tax which was made in England in 1893 to pay the debt con tracted t Napole wars, He history down to the Dill congress inc many Brazil Storm Visits Coast BUENC AIRES, April 3—A heavy accompanied by a fal wa ept r the coast Mar tn last night, Severa bathing establishments were ser iously ing damaged aud thirty two fish. carried away but f life vousela we i to give any one advice German Rail about taking it. I think there is no | better medicine and give you permis: | t t h this letter.” —Mra I 41 V wood St Y of Indiar id Strike Looms rtant thing about ydia egetable ( pound is help women suffering from | ae | 1ents common to their sex. strike of tallw rect) thieateied If you are nervous and run-down Phiaeh x any, ‘according to and have pains in your lower parts | ‘DYoush Chaputeh rkbha enti and in your back, remember that the | °" *#* agg ve Sah eet Vegetable Compound has relieved | Which says several thousand mer other women having the same symp. | "¥" fiready ceased work in I oms. For sale by druggists every: i Magdeburg, Mannheim re. ther important industrial cen SETTING THE STYLES the bangkok and picot braids are equally popular for the large cape line hats since they tend to give an effect of lightness and _ softness. Red, orange, green and Brown are favorite shades. For the smaller hats, the picot braid is chosen. As for trimmings, the ostrich who sticks his head in the sand is a lucky bird this season. For he will not know what is being done with his ravished wing and tafl feathers. On the small tight hats, the plumes are many times arranged to give the effect of a hussar’s busby. Aig: retts are similarly posed so as not to detract from the close, narrow effect about the face. On the bi: corfers and tricornes, however, the feathers are often posed over one ear. Svening frocks also are trimmed ch plumes. The skirt of One such black gown almost covered with short flounces of os- trich feathers, running diagonally from left to right, which shade gradually from a deep orange to a faint yellow and which end in a cluster of long plumes. falling from the right knee. The skirts continue to grow short- er in Paris and show a distinct ten- dency to lift up at the front and droop at the back, This perhaps may be due to the prevailing pose of the French. mannequins which changes almost as rapidly as the styles. At present the attitude as- sumed by the models is reminiscent, of a person who has just escaped a vicious thrust of an umbrella (med LATE SPORTS CAMBRIDG Maqs., April 3. —Devision by the chairman of the Yale, Harvard and F ceton Ath- letic committee that Sidney M. Legendre of New Orleans, Prince- ton’s kicking half back, and Earl ivans of Des Molnes, Iowa, Har- vard's first string tackle last fall, will not be eligible for football next fall, was made public today. with ostri CHICAGO, April 3.—Panguitch, Utah, continued its good form in the national _interscholastic basketball tournament at the Uni- versity of Chicago by defeating Fargo, N. D,, 34 to 31 today. Elgin, titinois, defeated Jack- son, Michigan, in a consolation game, 28 to 22. Windsor, Colo., triumphed over Sioux City, Iowa, 25 to 18 in a game in which the victors led all the way but with few thrills. McGlyn, right for Windsor, and Law, his Yeam mate at Cen- ter, each scored three field goals LOVELL, Wyo., April 3.—Leav- ing his homestead high up in the Big ‘Horn mountains," Stephen Ger- vay told his wife that he was go. ing hunting and would return the next day. Two weeks of terrible suspense dragged by but Gervay did not come home. The world outside was banked high with snow, was bitterly cold, was crushing the little woman who in the maddening solitude of the cabin, knew that before many weeks had passed she would be a mother. Wolves ¢f starvation came slink. ing from the forest, sniffing and clawing at the door. Stripped of its provisions, the homesteader’s cabin was the stalking place of famine. There seemed to be no escape, After all, when one is frail and deserted, death from starvation and freezing no longer is awesome. Already the mfortable as a retreat from the agony of Hving. And yet, out of eternity came the cry ef the unborn child. The soul THAT OF UNBORN CHILD AFTER TRAGEDY TAKES OFF HUSBAND of the mother was reached. Easy for her to die, but impossible that death should be allowed to seize the babe that later would bring her agein into the valley of the shadows. What chord was struck in the heart of the maker of man when on his own day of the Holy Sabbath, he beheld a small, wan creature of his stagger away from that cabin in the dreary, interminable wastes of the snow covered Big Horns Three days later in the mud of the road, the unconscious body of Mrs. Gervay was found by @ boy. The doctor who was called, re ports his patient to be suffering from starvation, exposure and pre mature childbirth. The possibility of recovery {1s fair, Searchers have found: the life less, frozen body of Btephen Get vay. 3 . Foreibly death has taken father and child. Torn on the rack and robbed the little widow hears death gently calling. GUARD UNITS ARE ASSIGRED * TO CAMPS; WYOMING INCLUDED SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., April 3. —Batteries C and D, 148th field ar- tillery and the third battalion, 186th infantry of the Idaho national guard will encamp at Camp Lewis, Wash., June 14 to 28, according to a re: ¥ised schedule of national guard en- campments announced by the ninth corps, army headquarters here, The 145th field artillery of the Utah national guard will encamp at. Camp Lewis, July 7 to 21. The 116th cavalry, less the second squadron and the headquarters com: pany of the. Idaho national guard will encamp at Payette Lake, Idaho, June 14 to 28.. The second squadron, 116th cavalry, state staff corps and departments and 143rd hospital com- pany of ‘the Utah national company of the Utah national guard will en- camp at Fort D. A. Russell, Wyo- ming, June 14 to 28. The 115th cav- airy and headquarters, 58th cavalry brigade of the Wyoming natfonal guard will encamp at Pole Mountain, Wyoming, June 14 to 28, and the 163rd infantry and 146th ambulance company of the Montana national guard will encamp at Fort William zranky Harrison, Montana, June 14 toy 28. TWO WOMEN DIE IN FIRE MORGANTOWN, N. C., April 3. Two women were killed and a man and a woman were badly burned, one perhaps fatally when fire destroyed the north wing of the Broad Oak sanitarlum here today. Socialist Speaker Will Appear Here Wednesday, April 9 Esther Friedman of New York elty, national organizer for the Sociniist party, will deliver an ad- ess in Casper on Wednesday, April 9, on “The | Political Drift.’ The carpenters local is said to have endorsed the occasion by a majority vote. Second Arrest In Liquor Fraud Case Authorized y YORK, April 3.—Assistant al Attorney John M. Blake to- day obtained a warrant for the ar rest of Sidney Reis, who is under indictment in Washington, D, C., with Congressman John W, Lang- ley of the tenth Kentucky district for liquor withdrawal frauds. POINCARE MAY and McGlyn made three free throws, For Sioux City, Mo- Bride, a forward led with four baskéts and Coan, Center, fol- lowed with three. ——_— FOUR BROKERS FACING TRIAL NEW YORK, April 3.—Thirty in- dictments today were returned against the four members of the bankrupt stock brokerage firm of E. W. Wagner and company, which failed December 81, 1921, for $10, 000,000, ‘The members of the firm which maintained branches in Chi- cago and 20 other cities were charged with tredin order of a Church Plans Publication of Big Newspaper as brokers against the tomer. YEW YORK, April 3.—A move- ment to establish a * national newspaper to be prihte ox pt Sunday at least great ble and ’ satisfact mouth piece for the Protestantiam of our whole country"? received support at the New York Methodist conference, > Yational power resources of the power production and distri nd power utili by representatives f ntries at the World Pows id, ation 1 be usse Conference to be held in London his summer. 4 ‘ RESIGN AGAIN PARIS, April 3.—({By The Asso- clated Press.)\—Nettled by the ob- structive tactics af the opposition, Premier Poincare threatened this evening to present the resignation of the entire cabinet to President Millerand unless the chamber of deputies discursion of foreign policy was completed and a vote obtained tonight. The chamber adjourned at 8:06 o'clock until 9 p. m, One dollar out of every nine dok lars recetved for farm products in the United States last year went into the pockets of Texas farmers, a tomozrov, is the work of KR tablets, Nature's Remedykeeps body functions regular, improves appetit lieves constipation, alive Tes prec mM JUNIORS— Little Me One-third the regu lar dose, Made ot me ingredient then .eandy coated. For ehil- dren and adults, YourDruggist SMITH & TURNER MAINE 6. 0. P, TD VOTE FOR PRES. GOOLIDGE PORTLAND, Maine, Maine Republicans at their state convention here today applauded Placards on the platform bearing the inscriptions, “Tho state of Maine is headquarters for Coolidge,” and “We are all for Coolidge.” Fifteen delegates to the national convention “were chosen and it ap- peared probable that in accordance with Maine political custom, they would go uninstructed. In his address as temporary chatr- man, Charles..P. Barnes, former speaker of the state house of repre- sentatives, said: “We express the unanimous sent!- ment of our people at home when we say that the Maine delegation to Cleveland shall be made up of those who will use every honorable effort to bring about the nomination of Law and Order Coolidge for presi dent." April 3.— HARTFORD, Connecticut's Conn., April delegation of seven- teen to the national convention at Cleveland in June, with an equal number of alternates, were chosen by the Republican state convention here. As customary the delegates wilt go uninstructed but the senti+ ment of the delegates. individually and collectively, is believed to be CONNELL'S JOB PRINTING SHOP GROWING FAST Geo. W, Connell, who recently came to Casper from Kansas, ari has opened a job printing offices at 128 East Fifth in the Old Public Market, is much pleased with his wuccess. Since opening on March 18 he has had more work than he could do. Besides doing the usual lnes of job printing, Mr. Connell takes orders fer all kinds of engravin, including calling cards, stationer: welding Invitations and announce- ments; electric process engraving. He also handles the Irving-Pitt loons-leaf sheets and binders. In a short time Mr. Connell expects to hayo several other lines that will help Casper business men to keep Casper money at home. The Chamber of Commerce has urged all Casper business to use on thelr stationery the cut of the oil frain bearing the legend: “Casper ships more ofl by rail than any other city In the world.” Connell can supply you with letter head and envelopes with the cut—Ad vertisement. HAY—GRAIN CHIX FEEDS— SALT Casper Warehouse Co. 268 INDUSTRIAL AVE TEL. 27 STORAGE FORWARDING For the best results in r n chickens use Victor Buttermilk For more eggs feed Starter. Victor Scratch Feed and Laying Mash. for the nomination of Cflvin Cool- idge fon the presidency. The convention adhered to its custom of having no platform or doclaration of principles. ——— Gen. Pershing Returns Home NEW YORK, April 3.—General John J. Pershing, arriving on the Washington after several morths: abroad, declared he found “things looking very much better in Burope than they did when I was there last.” “I think the Dawes commission will turn out sqmething that will be very, constructive and very beneficial to the situation,” he said. THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1924. SPANISH VAUDEVILLE TOBE — FEATURED NEXT WEDNESDAY ish pupils will find the program ot great value to them. The numbers will be stven in Spanish with En; lish explanations. ¥ Senor Carbonet, a native of the Phillipine “islands, will also give o short address in Spanish. Se Something unusual in amusement is announced for next Wednesday evening a Spanish vaudeville pro- gram will be given at the bith school auditorium under the ..vo- tion of Lesiie Danis, . Spanish in- structor in the local school. ‘There will be 50 pupils in the var- fous numbers which will run the gamut of torreador life from duels to love making. The purpose is to present scenes of Spanish life, in all its phases and idiocyncrastes. The public is cordially, invited to at-| tend and former night school Span- It's not a home until its planted with Jewells big, sturdy trees, shrubs, rosés “and vines. Insured to grow from our “1.500 acres of select specimen stock. Phone our western manager, John M. Rohan. Wyatt Hotel, for information and rices. At. . the energy tremendous children. ing flavor. Traveling the Road ‘homo at play are traveling the road of sturdy health—providing that the vast energy they spend is replaced and stored‘up by nutritious, energizing food Because Karo contains such a large percentage of tell you, Karo is one of the Great foods for growing And how they love its delicious, appetiz- Every day after play give them Blue Label or Red Label Karo on sliced bread. Get this Beautiful Aluminum Syrup Pitcher Worth *1-© for 40c and 5 Karo Labels Bay 5 cans of Karo from your grocer, send !abels to address above with 400 and you will receive the Syrap Pitcher by parcel post. Corn Products Sales Company, BHighth and Jackson Sts. Omaha, Nebr. of Robust Health building food element, Dextrose, the health value of which your doctor can « Irrigated have some of these ‘inspection. Meadowland Spring is here and MEADOWLAND irrigated tracts are on the market waiting for you to grasp the opportunity of getting ten acres. That is suitable for poultry raising, dairying or truck gardening. Easy payment $50.00 down, $35.00 per Sea month for ten acres. We will build you a house at cost on any tract you may select. A ten acre tract with one of the with a first payment of $250.00 and $50.00 per month. Each Tract Has Perpetual Water Right From the Platte River, Gravity Flow With two hours a day of your spare time, a spade and a hoe with some lettuce, radish, and onion seed, in six weeks’ time will produce enough to more than meet your payments. MEADOWLAND lies ten miles east and on the north side of the Yel- lowstone Highway. Take right hand road at Meadowland sign board and it will lead you to the tracts. leisure. Or we will be glad to have you call and have one of our re sentatives take you out. J. E. NELSON CO. Phone 1761 At Casper’s Door Acres We houses about completed and are ready for your se houses can be bought You can inspect these tracts at your pre- 343 P. & R. Bldg Cor. A and Woicott